Brachial plexus Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Brachial Plexus – a network of motor and sensory nerves formed by the anterior rami of C5‑C8 and T1 that supplies the upper limb.
Mnemonic – “Rich Tourists Drink Cold Beer” → Roots → Trunks → Divisions → Cords → Branches.
Roots → Trunks – C5‑C6 = upper trunk, C7 = middle trunk, C8‑T1 = lower trunk.
Divisions – each trunk splits into an anterior and posterior division (6 divisions total).
Cords – named for their position around the axillary artery: posterior, lateral, medial.
Terminal Branches – Musculocutaneous, Axillary, Radial, Median, Ulnar.
Key Functional Zones – motor to all shoulder/arm/forearm/hand muscles except trapezius; sensory to lateral, posterior, medial skin of the upper limb.
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📌 Must Remember
Roots: C5‑C8, T1 (± C4 or T2 in variants).
Upper (Erb’s) Plexus = C5‑C6 → weak deltoid, biceps, brachioradialis; lateral arm sensory loss.
Lower (Klumpke) Plexus = C8‑T1 → hand intrinsic weakness, inability to make a fist.
Preganglionic injury → loss of sensation above clavicle, Horner’s syndrome, pain in a “paralyzed” hand.
Postganglionic injury → sensation spared above clavicle, no Horner’s.
Long thoracic nerve (C5‑C7) → serratus anterior → “winged scapula” when injured.
Imaging of choice – MRI ≥ 1.5 T.
Regional block – axillary brachial plexus block targets the cords/branches at the axilla.
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🔄 Key Processes
Formation Sequence
Roots (C5‑T1) →
Trunks (Upper, Middle, Lower) →
Divisions (Anterior + Posterior for each trunk) →
Cords (Posterior = all posterior divisions; Lateral = anterior of upper + middle; Medial = anterior of lower) →
Branches (terminal + pre‑terminal).
Diagnosing Injury Level
Identify motor deficits → map to root‑muscle innervation.
Check sensory loss pattern (lateral vs medial vs posterior).
Look for Horner’s signs → indicates pre‑ganglionic lesion.
Performing an Axillary Block
Position arm abducted 90°.
Locate axillary artery; inject anesthetic around posterior, lateral, medial cords (or directly at terminal branches).
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🔍 Key Comparisons
Erb’s (Upper) vs. Klumpke (Lower) Injury
Roots involved: C5‑C6 vs. C8‑T1.
Motor loss: Shoulder/upper arm vs. hand intrinsics.
Sensory loss: Lateral arm vs. medial forearm/hand.
Preganglionic vs. Postganglionic Lesion
Sensory level: Above clavicle loss (preganglionic) vs. spared (postganglionic).
Horner’s: Present (preganglionic) vs. absent.
Pain: “Sting” pain in insensate hand (preganglionic).
Upper vs. Lower Trunk Contributions
Upper trunk → musculocutaneous & part of median; supplies biceps, brachialis.
Lower trunk → ulnar & part of median; supplies hand intrinsics.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Trapezius is supplied by the brachial plexus.” – False; it gets motor fibers from the spinal accessory (CN XI).
“All terminal branches arise from cords.” – True, but pre‑terminal (e.g., long thoracic, subscapular) can branch directly from roots or trunks.
“A “stinger” always indicates permanent damage.” – Most are transient neuropraxia; severe compression can cause lasting deficits.
“MRI is optional for brachial plexus imaging.” – MRI ≥ 1.5 T is the preferred modality for detailed nerve visualization.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Tree” Model: Visualize the plexus as a tree – roots (C‑T), three main trunks (branches), each splitting into two divisions (leaves), which re‑join to form three cords (larger branches) that finally bear the five terminal “fruits.”
“C5‑C6 = “Shoulder‑Arm” → Any deficit in deltoid or biceps points to upper trunk.
“C8‑T1 = “Hand‑Fingers” → Weakness of intrinsic hand muscles points to lower trunk.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Prefixed Plexus – includes C4, shifting contributions (e.g., C4 may supplement C5‑related muscles).
Post‑fixed Plexus – includes T2, giving extra fibers to lower trunk/ulnar distribution.
Long Thoracic Nerve – despite arising from roots, it is classified as a pre‑terminal branch.
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📍 When to Use Which
Identify injury level → Use motor pattern (deltoid + biceps = upper; hand intrinsics = lower).
Choose imaging → MRI ≥ 1.5 T for suspected plexus tear; CT‑myelography only if MRI contraindicated.
Select regional block → Axillary block for surgeries distal to the shoulder; supraclavicular block for proximal procedures (covers trunks & divisions).
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
“Winged scapula” → always points to long thoracic nerve (C5‑C7) → look for C5‑C7 root injury.
“Waiter's tip” (Erb‑Duchenne) posture → classic upper trunk lesion.
“Claw hand” → intrinsic hand muscle loss → lower trunk (C8‑T1) involvement.
Sensory loss confined to lateral forearm → median nerve (lateral cord) issue.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “Trapezius paralysis → brachial plexus injury.” – Trapezius is innervated by CN XI, not the plexus.
Answer choice that lists C4‑C8 as the only roots. – Forgetting T1 (and possible T2) makes it wrong.
“All pre‑terminal branches arise from cords.” – Long thoracic and subscapular nerves arise earlier (roots/trunks).
“Postganglionic lesions produce Horner’s syndrome.” – Only pre‑ganglionic lesions affect the sympathetic chain.
Imaging option: “CT scan is preferred.” – MRI ≥ 1.5 T is the gold standard for brachial plexus evaluation.
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